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WHEN THE PULPIT IS POLITICISED: THE STRANGE CASE OF A MEMORIAL MASS FOR EDGAR LUNGU

WHEN THE PULPIT IS POLITICISED: THE STRANGE CASE OF A MEMORIAL MASS FOR ECL

By Richard Kakuka

It is one thing for the Church to comfort the grieving. It is another entirely for the Church to be dragged into political theatre, especially when the “mourning” is for a man who has not even been laid to rest.

Recent reports from Lusaka have left many faithful Catholics deeply unsettled. A memorial service is being organised at a Catholic church, the very same church where former President Edgar Lungu once congregated, even though late Mr. Lungu was not a member of the Catholic Church, and, more pointedly, has not even been buried.

Let that sink in. A memorial Mass for a man who has not been buried, orchestrated not by the Vatican’s directives, but by a handful of powerful figures: Bishop Alick Banda, politician Tasila Lungu, and a few priests whose appetite for financial gain appears to outweigh their duty to the Gospel. Among them, sources name Father Matthews Mumba of St. Regina Parish in Chawana.

This is not an ecumenical gesture. It is a calculated political stunt dressed in vestments.

The Catholic Church has long stood as a moral beacon in Zambia, careful to avoid the muddy waters of partisan politics. But when church leaders allow their sanctuaries to be used for events that blur the line between prayer and political allegiance, they do more than offend tradition. They alienate parishioners who come to Mass seeking God, not a party manifesto.

Worse still, holding a memorial for a dead person who is still unburied is liturgically nonsensical and theologically hollow. The faithful are asking honest questions: Why is Bishop Banda allowing this? Why are priests who profess poverty chasing money from politicians? And why is the Church silent when its sanctuaries are turned into campaign venues?

Let us be clear, no one denies the late Mr. Lungu the right to be remembered. But using a Catholic altar to manufacture a political narrative, while living, and before any burial has taken place, is an abuse of the sacred.

The Catholic Church in Zambia must act now. Bishop Banda and his colleagues should cancel this event immediately. If they do not, they risk confirming what many already fear: that the cassock has become a costume for political ambition, and the Mass, a stage for the powerful.

Ilelanga News. June 05, 2026
We thank the Catholic Church for the Memorial Masses Conducted in Chawama, Pope Square and Petauke to remember the 6th President, Dr Edgar Chagwa Lungu on the day he died, 5th June, 2026.
The Church has acquitted itself well and on high moral grounds.
We are human beings who should remember a deceased person, who is no longer with us. As Catholics this is within Church Doctrine…We can have a memorial before Burial, 40 days after burial, and at any time. That’s why in the Eucharist, we have memorials of our Lord Jesus Christ whenever we are celebrating Mass.
Those cold Hearted ‘ Evil ‘ people can continue being in a world of Evil in which they fail to remember a person who lived among them..a former President of the Country.
Shame on you evil Bishops… Completely embarrassed for failing to adhere to Christianity Tenets.
To the Catholic Church, May God’s Grace continue working in the Church. Thank you.

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